Alexander Solzhenitsyn is the "father of democracy" in Russia.
In one of his books, the first volume of "Gulag
Archipelago," he wrote about how the communists in Russia, who consisted
of only the Jews and a tiny minority of Russian criminals, amoral opportunists, and welfare rabble were
able to maintain their grip on all of Russia by keeping the Russian majority, which hated them, too frightened
to resist.

Solzhenitsyn writes of the period in 1934 and 1935, when the Jewish commissar
Genrikh Yagoda headed
the Soviet secret police, and Yagoda's black vans went out every night in
St. Petersburg, known then as
Leningrad, to round up "class enemies": former members of the
aristocracy, former civil servants, former
businessmen, former teachers and professors and professional people, any
Russian -- any real Russian --
who had graduated from a university. A quarter of the population of the
city was arrested and liquidated
by Yagoda during this two-year period.

And Solzhenitsyn laments that the citizens of St. Petersburg cowered
behind their doors when the black
vans pulled up at their apartment houses night after night to arrest their
neighbors. If only the decent
Russians had fought back, Solzhenitsyn says, if only they had ambushed some
of these secret police thugs
in the hallways of their apartments with knives and pickaxes and hammers,
if only they had spiked the
tires of the police vans while the thugs were in the apartments dragging
out their victims, they could
easily have overwhelmed Yagoda's forces and forced an end to the mass arrests.
But they didn't fight
back, and the arrests and liquidations continued. And so, Solzhenitsyn concludes,
because of their
cowardice and their selfishness the Russians deserved what the communists
did to them.

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